16
VOL. XXX, No. 16 [PRICE TWELVE CENTS] JANUARY 19, 1928 Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed Compensation Insurance by 154 Veterans Cornell Defeats Yale, League Basket- ball Leader, by 29 to 24 Score Forestry Department Given 500 Acres of Abandoned Farm Land Near Ithaca Walter P. Cooke '91 Completes Two Years Service with Dawes Plan Commission Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August. Subscription $4 per year. Entered as second class matter, Ithaca, N k Y. Postmaster: Return postage guaranteed. Use form 3578 ΐor uιιάeliveratole copies.

Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    10

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

VOL. XXX, No. 16 [PRICE TWELVE CENTS] JANUARY 19, 1928

Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust-ed Compensation Insurance

by 154 Veterans

Cornell Defeats Yale, League Basket-ball Leader, by 29 to 24

Score

Forestry Department Given 500Acres of Abandoned Farm

Land Near Ithaca

Walter P. Cooke '91 Completes TwoYears Service with Dawes

Plan Commission

Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August. Subscription $4 per year. Entered as second class matter, Ithaca, Nk Y.Postmaster: Return postage guaranteed. Use form 3578 ΐor uιιάeliveratole copies.

Page 2: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

Thoroughness

Preparatory SchoolSecond term begins Feb-

ruary 3rd. Save a half yearor more by intensive workin this school.

If you are in doubt aboutmaking Cornell entranceby next September, writeus for information.

Our method involveshigh-grade instruction insmall classes, hard work,complete use of time, stim-ulating environment.

Efficiency

C ASC ADILLA Tutoring School

C. M. Doyle '02,Headmaster

Telephone 2014

We give personal inter-est along with skilled in-struction to students whoneed coaching in univer-sity courses or in prepar-ation for entrance or otherexaminations.

Cornell entrance andmid-year finals now holdthe center of the stage.

Telephone for group orindividual appointments.

Ithaca, New York

We welcome your inquiry into our method and standing.

Here is Your Timetableto and fromITHACA

These convenient Lehigh Valley trains link Ithacawith Pennsylvania Station, New York, and ReadingTerminal, Philadelphia every day.

Standard Time8.50 A.M.

9.24 A.M.

9.20 A.M.

4.49 P.M.

8.59 A.M.

5.03 P.M.

5.12 P.M.

545 P.M.* Sleepers may be occupied at Ithaca until 8.00 A.M.fSleepers open for occupancy 10.00 P.M.

For reservations, etc., phone Wisconsin 4210 (New York); Rittenhouse1140 (Phila.); Mitchell 7200 or Terrace 3965 (Newark); 2306 (Ithaca).

Lv. New YorkLv. NewarkLv. PhiladelphiaAr. Ithaca

Lv. IthacaAr. PhiladelphiaAr. NewarkAr. New York

11.50 A.M.12.24 P.M.I2.4O P.M.

8.21 P.M.

12.37 P M.

8.08 P.M.

8.14 P.M.

8.47 P.M.

8.IO P.M.

8.44 P.M.

8.40 P.M.

*5.00 A.M.

fιo.59 P.M.6.21 A.M.

6,17 A.M.

7.13 A.M.

f l I .5O P.M.

12.17 A.M.

tl2.O5 A.M.

7-37 A.M.

Lehighλfelley RailroadCΊhe Route of The Black Diamond

FLOWERSby WIREdelivered promptlyto any address inthe civilized world.

"Say it with Flowers"

Every event is anoccasion for flowers

The Bool FloralCompany, Inc.

*' The House of Universal Service''

Ithaca, New York

Page 3: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

CORNELL ALUMNI NEWSVOL. xxx. No. 16 ITHACA, NEW YORK, JANUARY 19, 19x8 PRICE 12. CENTS

Observe Founder's Day

Ithaca Cornellians Celebrate at AnnualBanquet—President Visions Greater

Cornell

A greater Cornell, "meeting ίhe de-mands of the world," was visioned byPresident Farrand in his address to 150Cornellians at the joint Founder's Daybanquet of the Cornell Women's Club ofIthaca and the Cornell Club of Ithaca inPrudence Risley Hall.

The present plans for the developmentof the University, President Farrand de-clared, are not new. They are merelyadaptations because of new conditions ofthe ideals of the Founder, Ezra Cornell,and his co-workers in the founding of theUniversity.

Descendants of the Founder, membersof the Faculty, and friends of the Univer-sity joined with the members of the Ithacaclubs to make the sixtieth observance ofFounder's Day a success. But it was notwholly to the future that the eyes of thegathering turned. "Cornell," as PresidentFarrand said, "was founded upon themost thoroughly thought out ideals, andit is doubly desirable that we view onceagain the early days."

So it was with an eye to the past thatthose who attended the banquet honoredEzra Cornell. As John A. Blair '28, agreat grandson of the Founder, expressedhis own feeling, tribute was paid more tothe embodiment of the ideals of EzraCornell than to his personality, "forrecollections of the man give way to thememory of his ideals."

Members of the Cornell family wereguests of the clubs at the dinner, but MissMary E. Cornell, daughter of the Founder,was unable to be present and sent regrets.Robert E. Treman '09 was toastmaster.Mrs. Elsie Singmaster Lewars '02 readone of her stories, "The World TurnedUpside Down." A banjo quartet fromthe Banjo and Mandolin Club providedentertainment.

The descendants of the Founder presentat the banquet, with their wives or hus-bands were Mrs. Charles L. Taylor, MissDorothy Cornell, Charles E. Cornell,Franklin C. Cornell '89, Miss Mary Blair,John A. Blair '28, and W. Cornell Dehert'28.

President Farrand recalled the men whocaused the memory of the earlier Cornellto remain so clear today. Asking if thefigures of today would be rememberedfifty years from now, President Farrand

answered his own question by declaringemphatically that "the distinction ofCornell was never higher than it is today,and that distinction rests on individuals,men of science and learning, teaching thesuccession of classes. Our task is to seethat the personnel of the University iskept at the highest possible stage."

Concluding his address, President Far-rand said, "There is not the faintest shadeof doubt as to the future development ofCornell. And so my message is one ofappreciation and congratulation to youintimately connected with the Universityon the past, present and the future of agreater Cornell."

The Cornell Club of Rochester whichwas holding its own meeting at the timehad sent thirty red and thirty whitecarnations as a tribute to the memory ofthe Founder; and these formed the centraldecoration at the speakers' table. Thefloral decorations were arranged by thestudents in the department of floricultureunder the direction of Professor E. A.White.

Give War Insurance

PROFESSOR ROBERTS WELL AT 94

Dean Veranus A. Moore '87 of theVeterinary College has brought back fromCalifornia the story of his meeting withProfessor Isaac P. Roberts, former deanof the College of Agriculture. DeanMoore was a speaker at a recent meetingof veterinarians in that State.

At the same time letters have been re-ceived in Ithaca from Roger M. RobertsΌi of Palo Alto, Calif., saying that hisfather is now living with a daughter,Mrs. Mary Roberts Coolidge '82, inBerkeley, Calif. Mr. Roberts writes ofhis father:

"Should by any chance any of you oryour friends remember Professor Robertsyou may say that he is ninety-four yearsold, and is quite well and very bright.He gets about slowly, to be sure, but iskeenly interested in affairs. He is cheerfuland has a remarkably happy outlook onlife."

HEADS COMMUNITY CHEST

The Ithaca Community Chest will beled during 1928 by Harold Flack '12, vice-president and campaign manager for thelast two years. Flack, who is secretaryof the Cornellian Council, succeeds HarryG. Stutz '07 as president. Other Cornel-lians among the officers elected are PaulS. Livermore '97, vice-president; Kath-erine Finch Ί8, secretary, and CharlesH. Newman '13, treasurer.

154 Cornell World War Veterans MakeUniversity Beneficiary of Adjusted

Compensation Policies

The Cornellian Council, through HaroldFlack '12, executive secretary, has an-nounced that 154 Cornell World Warveterans have named the University asthe beneficiary of their adjusted compensa-tion insurance. Of this number 144 hadnot previously applied for the Govern-ment bonus and ten Cornellians changedthe beneficiary to the University.

The certificates, maturing in aboutseventeen years, will bring a fund ofabout $154,000 to Cornell, for the indi-vidual certificates average $1,000 each.

The Cornellian Council recently senta letter to Cornell War veterans, suggest-ing that the University be named thebeneficiary where the needs of dependentswere already provided for. The Councilalso rendered assistance in the applica-tions for the compensation insurance inother cases.

Me FADDEN TRAVELS SOUTH

Thomas J. McFadden '22, recently ap-pointed field secretary attached to theoffice of the Alumni Representative, hasstarted on a trip which will cover most ofthe southeastern part of the country.McFadden left Ithaca on Sunday, Janu-ary 8, not to return until February 5.During his first week on the road he hasmet with alumni groups in Baltimore,Washington, Richmond, Raleigh, andJacksonville. His schedule calls formeetings in Palm Beach, Miami, and theneighboring territory between January 15and 18, followed by meetings in Tampaon the 19th, St. Petersburg on the 2oth.The last meeting in Florida is scheduledfor Orlando on the 2ist.

Leaving Florida McFadden will go toNew Orleans for a meeting there onJanuary 23, and will then go north on thefollowing schedule: January 25, Birming-ham; 26th to 28th, Atlanta; βoth, Chatta-nooga; 3ist, Nashville; February i, Knox-ville; 2nd, Lexington; 3rd, Louisville;4th, Cincinnati.

PROFESSOR ROSWELL C. GIBBS Ό6 ofthe Physics Department, chairman of theAdvisory Board for Underclassmen, hasbeen elected president of Phi Kappa Phi,national honorary scholastic society. Theelection was held in Nashville, Tenn., onDecember 28.

Page 4: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

198 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

ATHLETICS

Win First League GameA Yale five that had scored two Inter-

collegiate Basketball League victories lostto an improved Cornell j^quintet in theDrill Hall Saturday night, 29-24, its rallyin the second half failing by1 two points totake Cornell out of the lead it held fromthe first few minutes of play. The gamewas Cornell's first in the league.

In the other game of the week Cornelllost to Colgate in the Drill Hall lastTuesday, 30-26, a Maroon rally in thesecond half overcoming a Red and Whitelead.

The Yale game demonstrated that Cor-nell's staying power has improved. In amajority of the games so far Cornell hasdisplayed power and smoothness in thefirst period only to slump in the secondhalf, losing leads and games by thesmallest of margins.

Lay ton, forward, was the big factor inCornell's victory over Yale. He scoredseventeen points, thirteen of them in thefirst half. Two field goals in the last fiveminutes of the play settled the issue forthe Red and White. Captain Schloss-bach and Stein, playing guard, wereequally responsible for the win, holdingthe fast Yale forwards and the star Fodder,Eli center. Yale could not work the ballclose to the basket, and the Elis scoredonly five goals from the field. Fourteenpoints were made from the foul line.

The game was one of the most spec-tacular ever seen in the Drill Hall. Foulpoints by Merrill, Yale, and Layton, Cor-nell, tied the score in the first two minutesof play, but Captain Schlossbach's fieldgoal put Cornell into the lead, a lead heldthroughout the game. Cornell finishedthe half leading the New Haven five, 19-11.

The first score of the second half wasmade by Schlossbach, a field goal, but thenext seven points went to Yale, five ofthem on free throws. A field goal byLewis, sub center for Masten, who wasremoved on personal fouls, widened theRed and White margin, but Fodder's twofoul points brought the score to 23-22.Both teams were going at a terrific pace,when Layton cut in to cage a goal. Nas-sau, Yale sub, who had scored two ofYale's three field goals in the first period,got another point from the foul line, butLewis's second goal practically ended thegame. Ward added another point forYale, and Cornell changed its tactics,drawing Yale's defense down the floorand allowing Layton to execute a prettydeceptive play for another goal as thegame ended.

The Colgate game saw Cornell playingwell throughout, but the Red and Whitecould not hold the pace and continue itswork of smothering Bollerman, the giantMaroon center. It was Bollerman whowas ultimately responsible for Colgate's

victory in the second half. He scoredsixteen points in the game.

Even in the Colgate game Cornellindicated a fast-improving team. Thepassing was fast and smooth, the shootingbetter, and the general floor tactics moredeceptive. Lack of a tall center to offsetthe advantage held by Bollerman was thefactor of the defeat.

Going into the second half with a three-point lead, Cornell increased it to six be-fore Colgate got under way, and Bollermanled the attack that tied the score. Twofield goals by Bickle and Bonnachersettled the outcome.

The line-ups:

Colgate (30)G F P

Capes, If o o oDowler, If 2 i 5Hagy, rf o o oBonnacher, rf i i 3Makholm, c o o oBollerman, c 5 6 16Dumont, Ig o o oWalsh, Ig i o 2Flynn, rg o o oBickle, rg 2 o 4

Totals ii 8 30

Cornell (26)G F P

Caldwell, If 2 o 4Layton, rf o i iBeck, rf o o oMasten, c 2 5 9Lewis, c i o 2Stein, Ig 2 o 4Gersten, Ig o o oSchlossbach, rg 2 2 6

Totals 9 8 26Referee: Dowling, Union. Umpire:

Kearney, Syracuse. Time of periods,20 minutes.

Cornell (29)G F P

Caldwell, If o i iLayton, rf 6 5 17Masten, c i o 2Lewis, c-lf 2 o 4Stein, Ig o o oBeck, Ig-lf o o oSchlossbach, rg 2 i 5

Totals ii 7 29

Yale (24)G F P

Ward, If o 3 3Merrill, If i i 3Fodder, c 2 7 nMcNulty, Ig o o oNassau, Ig 2 3 7Manary, rg o o o

Yearling Five LosesThe Cornell freshman five lost its first

regularly scheduled game Saturday nightto the Manlius School quintet, 43-22.Outscored 21-5 in the first half, the year-lings rallied in the second period and heldthe visitors more closely. Kumpf, for-ward, and Welch, guard, turned in thebest performances for the 1931 five.

Totals 5 14 24

Referee: Murray, N. Y. A. C. Umpire:Walsh, Demarest. Time, of periods, 30minutes.

VETERINARIANS MEET HERE

Veterinarians of New York State werein Ithaca last week for the twentieth an-nual conference of the New York StateVeterinary Society. Two hundred veter-inarians attended the closing banquet inthe Ithaca Hotel, at which PresidentFarrand, Commissioner James Sullivanof the State Department of Education,Dr. Alfred Atkinson, M.S. '12, presidentof Montana State Agricultural College;Dr. H. P. Hoskins, secretary of the Ameri-can Veterinary Medical Association, andDr. R. S. MacKellar, secretary of theState Society, were speakers.

President Farrand urged upon theveterinarians the assumption "of a re-sponsible place in every sanitary effortmade by the home community. One ofthe most unfortunate obstacles to sciencehas been the hesitancy of the medical manto interest himself in this work. We mustaccept our responsibility as.citizens aswell as practitioners."

Commissioner Sullivan's theme waseducation, and he discussed the advis-ability of increasing educational require-ments for the professions under the controlof the State. President Atkinson ex-pressed the respect for Cornell and thework done here in veterinary medicinethat is held in the State of Montana.Dr. MacKellar and Dr. Hoskins broughtthe greetings of the organizations theyrepresented.

The two-day session was devoted prin-cipally to the presentation of technicalpapers. Dean Veranus A. Moore '87 madethe opening address of the conference.

Among the Cornell] ans presentingpapers were Assistant Professor EarlSunderville Ό8, Dr. Raymond L. Conklin'17 of MacDonald College, Quebec,Ontario; Dr. William E. Muldoon '13 ofPeru, Ind.; Dr. Walter W. Williams '13 ofSpringfield, Mass.; Assistant ProfessorCharles M. Carpenter '17, Assistant Pro-fessor Herbert L. Oilman '17, ProfessorRaymond R. Birch '12, Assistant Profes-sor James W. Benner, M.S. '20, Assist-ant Professor Charles E. Hay den '14Professor Pierre A. Fish '90, ProfessorWilliam A. Hagan, M.S. '17, AlexanderZeissig '23, Professor Howard J. Milks'04, Assistant Professor Hadley C. Steph-enson '14, Professor James N. Frost '07,and Assistant Professor Myron G.Fincher '20.

The Alumni Association of the Veter-inary College held its reunion at the timepf the conference.

Page 5: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 199

Lectures on Disarmament

Prominent Figure in League of NationsActivities Gives Three Addresses on

Schiff Foundation

Cornell entertained a distinguishedvisitor on January 11-13 when DonSalvador de Madariaga, former chief ofthe disarmament section of the League ofNations Secretariat, visited the Univer-sity to give three lectures on "The Progressof Disarmament" on the Schiff Founda-tion.

He brought to America the idea thatdisarmament does not mean the ab'olitionof all arms, but the right proportion forevery nation. He advocated the consider-ation of many indeterminate quantities,in addition to men, material,.and money,in discussions of the question, and he de-clared that armies should be instrumentsof peace rather than of war.

His three lectures were devoted to thetopics of "Obstacles," "Results," and"Prospects." He feels the mere outlaw-ing of war would be futile, saying that"no substantial contribution can be madeto the peace of the world unless aggressivewar is distinguished from mere war."

Senor de Madariaga paid tribute to theLeague of Nations, which he said "hasaccomplished a great work in politicaleducation by teaching the world a methodof solving its problems by peaceful means.Its ideas have sunk in, whether peopleshave accepted them naturally or whetherthey only feel they might like them.They have learned that life precedes law,not that law precedes life."

Senor de Madariaga took occasion torefute the idea that the League is a super-state. "It is an association of govern-ments, contending with many things," hesaid. "The decisions of its members mustbe unanimous, else the minority would bethe victim of a true super-state. Differ-ences of race, religion, temperament, aremet with conditions of mind, and eachnation considers matters in its own way."

"The present moment," he said, "is notfavorable for disarmament. There arethree great centers of unrest." These arethe Central Powers, Russia, and theBalkans. "The North American situa-tion," he added, "as a whole is also notclear."

In another lecture, however, he dis-closed progress. "Efforts to provide amethod of disarming have failed, but outof it all has come the great spirit ofarbitration. The League has shown thatnothing more may be said on the technicalside of the question. There can be nogreat result from the direct method. Afeeling of security, however, makes onenation feel better towards its neighbors,and while there are great obstacles to beovercome, progress is being made."

In an interview, Senor de Madariagaobserved that he was impressed withAmerica's intelligent interest in the sub-

ject of disarmament, finding this particu-larly true in the case of women. "I find,"he said, "an enormous amount of politicalinterest among women in America,singularly free from sentimentalism. Alto-gether, I have found in America a moreinterested opinion on public affairs thanin any other country I have visited."

LECTURES OF THE WEEK included:"Agassiz, a Glimpse of His Country" byProfessor Glenn W. Herri ck '96; "MentalDevelopment in Childhood and Psycho-Analysis" by Dr. Karl Buehler, professor

of philosophy in the University of Viennaand exchange professor in Johns HopkinsUniversity; "Erinnerungen an Russlandvor und nach der Revolution" by Profes-sor Paul Walden, George Fisher Bakernon-resident lecturer in chemistry; "TheProgress of Disarmament" (three lectures)by Don Salvador de Madariaga, professorof Spanish studies in the University ofOxford; "Democracy in Europe after theWar" by J. Alfred Spender, former editorof The Westminster Gazette] "Mountain-Climbing in the Alps" by Dr. Walter W.Hyde '93, professor of Greek and ancienthistory in the University of Pennsylvania.

THE SUN DOES HIS BESTIthaca is in the so-called "shadow belt" of New York.

Photo by J. P. Troy

Page 6: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

200 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

BOOKS

Early Victorian AmericaThe Diary of Philip Hone, 1828-1851.

Edited, with an Introduction, by AllanNevins, Professor of American History inCornell. New York. Dodd, Mead & Co.1927. 24 cm. 2 vols., pp. xxx, 962.Frontispiece portraits. Price, $10.

This is a noteworthy publication. Thetime was ripe for it. It was in 1889 thatBayard Tuckerman published a two-volume selection (835 pages) from thetwenty-eight manuscript volumes (about11,200 quarto pages in all, around twomillion words) of Philip Hone's Diary,now owned by the New York HistoricalSociety. But Tuckerman's work wasincomplete in many respects, and it wastime the work was done over and withgreater thoroughness. This task has nowbeen completed by Professor Nevins withnotable success. He has retained practi-cally everything in the first edition, andby means of condensations of many im-personal passages has managed, he be-lieves, to reproduce everything of value tothe historian and general student of earlyAmerican culture, ΐhe volumes areequipped with a well written introductionof 13 pages, a four-page list of dramatispersonae, and a good index of 35 pages.

Philip Hone, mayor of New Ύork in1826 and a leader of aristocratic societyfor more than a third of a century, livedfrom 1780 to 1851 and came of German-French ancestry (the name being originallyHome). Beginning a business career atthe age of seventeen, as chief assistant tohis brother John in an auction businesswhich was to prosper greatly, he becamea partner on January i, 1800, and thefirst year received an income of £ι,no(one-eighth of the whole). The next yearthe firm became Hone, Smith and Honeand his profits were increased to one-fourth. By 1815 he was receiving seven-twentieths, that year $55*652. By 1820he was able to retire from business andmake an extended trip to Europe. Thoughlacking a formal higher education, hetrained himself and acquired an excellenttaste and great refinement of manners;he was always a deeply religious man ofsterling character and scrupulous honesty,but with the aristocratic point of view andwithout much sympathy for the classesbelow his own. Naturally, then, beinglittle known to the masses, he was neverwidely popular and in 1839 was badlybeaten in the race for State Senator. In1849 he was appointed by PresidentTaylor Naval Officer of J he District ofNew York, and was a faithful publicservant.

His diary contains much that is of gen-eral interest. There is a good deal aboutpolitics; Hone was an ardent Whig andwas the first to use that term for theAmerican party which proudly bore it for

so many years. He was the counselor andagent for the great Whig leaders, Webster,Clay, Seward, Nathaniel Tallmadge,Zachary Taylor; he gives us especiallyinteresting glimpses of Webster in "un-

But as Professor Nevins says, Hone wasmore deeply interested in the cultural lifeof New York, and tells us much about thecelebrities of the day—Irving, Halleck,Samuel F. B. Morse, painter and inventor,Junius Brutus Booth and Ned Forrest,the irascible Fenimore Cooper, CaptainMarryat, Dickens, Edward Everett, Chan-cellor James Kent, Jared Sparks, JohnP. Kennedy, Fanny Kemble, Red Jacket,Fanny Ellsler, the dancer, Nicholas Biddle,the unfortunate banker, Albert Gallatin,Prescott, and Audubon the ornithologist.Of Poe we see nothing, and of Bryant wehear little that was good, since politicaldifferences separated him from Hone'sWhig circle.

And there are illuminating remarks onthe life of the city with which he was soclosely identified. In the quarter-centuryrepresented he saw it "grow from twohundred thousand inhabitants to fivehundred thousand; he saw its residentialarea successively engulf the Collect, the'market place' north of Seventh Street onthe East Side, Greenwich Village, andUnion Square, and move up the slope ofMurray Hill. He witnessed a multitudeof social changes. When he began towrite the country was still in the stage-coach era; his pages record the irresistibleexpansion of railway lines until, in makinghis journey west in 1847, he saw themcover half the nation with their network.His first trips to Europe were by sailingpacket, but in the late thirties he chronicleswith wonder the advent of steamshiplines, their boats moving almost as regu-larly as clockwork. He saw the Crotonwater system inaugurated; ... he sawjournalism transformed by the impudent,vulgar, hustling Bennett; he saw laborersestablish their right to strike withoutbeing jailed for it, and new millionaireslike A. T. Stewart and Cornelius Vander-bilt arising. He watched the nation ex-pand to the Pacific, and the anti-slaveryagitation grow from a murmur into ahorrendous roar."

Books and Magazine ArticlesIn The New York Times Magazine for

January 8 James C. Young has an in-teresting article on "Ezra Cornell's WorkSixty Years After." There is a fine por-trait of Ezra Cornell as a young man.

In The Oberlίn Alumni Magazine for

January "The Spanish World in EnglishFiction," a bibliography by Professor

Cony Sturgis, '04-5 Grad., of Oberlin, is

reviewed by Glenn Barr.

In the October number of Hispania

Professor Sturgis has an article on the

logic involved in the use of the Spanishpronoun le for les.

"The Man Who Lied at Twelve o;

Clock," a negro comedy in one act byPaul Green, '22-3 Grad., has just beenpublished by Samuel French of New York,at fifty cents.

In School and Society for December 31Archie M. Palmer Ί8, now assistant di-rector of the Institute of InternationalEducation, describes "Exchange Fellow-ship Opportunities for Graduate StudyAbroad." Applications for the fellow-ships and scholarships described must bemade on or before certain dates, as fol-lows: France, February i; Germany, Feb-ruary 15; Czechoslovakia, Switzerland,March i; Hungary, March 15. The ad-dress of the Institute is 2 West Forty-fifthStreet, New York.

MORE LAND FOR FORESTRY

Cornell has received an anonymous giftof five hundred acres of abandoned farmland in the Town of Newfield near Ithacafor experiments and instruction in forestryand as an observation ground for botanists.The gift has been accepted by the Com-mittee on General Administration of theBoard of Trustees. It was made by analumnus through the Cornellian Council.

There are five parcels in the land, thelargest comprising two hundred acres onthe top of Newfield Hill, southwest of theVillage of Newfield and fifteen miles fromIthaca on the Elmira State road. Themaximum elevation is 1,900 feet. Theland has not been used for farming inrecent years.

The second parcel, containing 150 acres,is on Carter Creek, and it includes astretch of ravine on Connecticut Hill. Itis wooded with young, second-growthhardwood trees, and has a stream withinits boundaries. The third parcel of thirtyacres lies between the two larger parcels.Its elevation is 1,400 feet.

The fourth parcel of 35 acres lies acrossPony Hollow, on what is known as BuellHill. It bears a natural crop of youngsecond-growth white pine trees. Thefifth parcel of 85 acres lies halfway be-tween the Village of Newfield and CayutaLake. Since the area is not adapted toforest experimentation, it may be madepart of a proposed State fish and gamerefuge for the Connecticut Hill region.

Plans are under way for the plantingof the abandoned farmland within theparcels. When areas are already wooded,improvement cuttings and thinnings todemonstrate how young stands of timbermay become productive will be undertaken.

As the best means of restoring the landto productivity the Department of For-estry will undertake the planting of theland, and it is expected to constitute avaluable and timely experiment in re-forestation. The tract is typical of ap-proximately four million acres of similarunproductive land in the State whoserestoration by forest-planting is beingurged by the Industrial Survey Com-mission.

Page 7: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 201

OBITUARIES

Charles J. Walch >84Charles John Walch died on November

2nd.He was born in Syracuse, N. Y., on

December n, 1861, the son of Frederickand Caroline Arheΐdt λValch. He re-ceived the degree of B.S. He was a mem-ber of the baseball team.

He received the degree of M.D. fromSyracuse University in 1891. Through-out his life he was a practicing physicianand surgeon in Syracuse. '

Harry S. Thayer '91Harry Stowe Thayer died of heart

disease at his home in Elmira on July 25.He was born in Van Etten, N. Y., in

1869. He received the degree of B.L.He was a lawyer, and for many years

was associated with J. Sloat Fassett inElmira.

He is survived by his wife, who wasMiss Mary Eaton of Elmira, and a sister,Mrs. Anna B. Ray of Ithaca, mother ofMargaret Ray '25.

William B. Cook, Jr., '96William Burt Cook, Jr., died in Brook-

lyn, N. Y., on November 30, after a briefillness.

He was born in Windsor Locks, Conn.,on May 18, 1875, the sone of William B.and Harriet Dewey Cook. He graduatedwith the degree of A.B. He later grad-uated from the New York State LibrarySchool and the Union College Law School.He was at one time assistant librarian ofthe New York State Law Library inAlbany, and had for seventeen years beenpracticing law in Brooklyn and acting asassistant librarian of the Brooklyn LawLibrary.

He is survived by his wife, who was MissAda C. Roff, and three daughters, Mrs.Elizabeth Dewey Hodgins, and Alida H.and Margaret Cook.

Robert LΉ. Tate ΊlRobert LΉommedieu Tate died sud-

denly on December 20, at a sanitarium onLong Island where he was undergoingtreatment.

He was born on September 3, 1888, atUnion Springs, N. Y., the son of RobertW. and Susan LΉommedieu Tate. Hegraduated with the degree of C.E. Hewas a member of Lambda Chi Alpha.

From 1922 until 1926 he was with A.Burton Cohen, a consulting engineer inNew York, and was resident constructionengineer in charge of the field engineeringand detailing of the Hudson BoulevardBridge at Journal Square, Jersey City,N. J.

In the War Tate was commissioned alieutenant at the Officers Training Campat Madison Barracks, and went overseasin May, 1918, with the 3O3d Engineers.He was in the St. Mihiel and Meuse-

Argonne offensives. He was dischargedin June, 1919, with the rank of captain,and was later commissioned a major inthe Engineer Officers' Reserve Corps.

Tate is survived by his mother and hiswife, who was Miss Leonora T. VanDerhoef of Ithaca.

Samuel Ginsburg '17Word has been received of the death on

February 28, 1926, of Samuel Ginsburg,after eight years of illness.

He was born in New Haven, Conn., onJuly 2, 1896, the son of Mr. and Mrs.Max G. Ginsburg. He graduated withthe degree of B.S.

He worked for some time with theGrand Central Chemical Laboratories, butin 1919 tuberculosis, which he had con-tracted in his senior year, forced him togive up and go to a sanatorium in Denver.He spent the rest of his life in sanatoriumsand hospitals. His tuberculosis is at-tributed by his family to the fact that' heworked his way entirely through college,his lowered vitality making him susceptibleto disease.

He is survived by a sister, Mrs. MathildeFreund of Scarsdale, N. Y.

Virgil S. Onstott '21Virgil Samms Onstott died on Novem-

ber ii in Rochester, Pa., following anoperation for appendicitis.

He was born in Saltsburg, Pa., on Sep-tember 22, 1897, the son of Dr. and Mrs.E. Onstott. He received the degree of C.E.

Since his graduation he had been con-nected with the Pennsylvania State High-way Department as district engineer.

He was married in November, 1925, andleaves his wife and one child, also abrother, Howard K. Onstott '24.

Richard B. Broadbent '30Richard Bushnell Broadbent died at

the Cornell Infirmary on January 8, ofsepticemia, resulting from septic sorethroat and laryngitis. His throat becamesore while he was on the Christmas tripwith the Musical Clubs, but he did notseek medical attention for some daysafter his return to Ithaca.

He was born in Grand Rapids, Mich.,on May n, 1907, the son of Mr. and Mrs.W. E. Broadbent. He entered Cornell in1926 in engineering. He was a member ofDelta Tau Delta. His family live inEast Orange, N. J.

IRVING LEVY '28 of New York won the'94 Memorial Prize in the annual competi-tion here on January 10. The subjectdebated "The Conduct of Our Relationswith Nicaragua by the Coolidge Adminis-tration." The other contestants wereAbraham Rabinowitz '28 of New York,Robert D. Jones '29 of Auburn, CharlesL. Brayton '28 of Ithaca, Ralph R. Mos-cowitz '29 of Brooklyn, and Harrop A.Freeman '29 of Ithaca.

MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION

At the recent meeting of the ModernLanguage Association of America atLouisville, Kentucky, the following paperswere read by Cornellians: "A CriticalStudy o£ Andre" Maurois," ProfessorDavid C. Cabeen, A.M. '19, of SyracuseUniversity; "Elizabeth as Euphuist BeforeEuphues," Professor Theodore T. Sten-berg, Ph.D. '26, University of Texas;Report on the Middle English Dictionary,Professor Clark S. Northup '93; "Aber-crombie's View of Poetry," ProfessorStenberg; "What the Victorians ReadWhen They Were Children," ProfessorHomer A. Watt Ό6, New York Univer-sity; "Othello as a Model for Dry den inAll for Love," Professor Thomas P. Har-rison, Ph.D. '24, University of Texas;"The Gregorian Mission and Early Eng-lish Education," Professor Putnam F.Jones '24, A.M. '26, Ph.D. '27, Universityof Pittsburgh. Three Cornellians actedas presiding officers: Professor George L.Hamilton at the meeting of the AmericanAssociation of Teachers of Italian, Pro-fessor George H. McKnight '92 at themeeting of the Middle English Section,and Professor Elijah C. Hills '92 at themeeting of the Section on Spanish Liter-ature Since the Renaissance.

CALENDAR IN NEW DRESS

The class reunion calendar, issued eachyear by the Alumni Office, has this yearappeared in new dress. The generalscheme of the calendar is the same as inother years, covering the first six monthsof the year, and marking as red letter daysthe dates when Cornell events in Ithacaor abroad are scheduled. The drawing,as in the past, is the work of Andre Smith'02, but instead of one drawing as in otheryears, this calendar has a different sketch,appropriate to the season, on each of thesix sheets. The draughtsmanship is thework of Lawrence Doubleday '28, of theCollege of Architecture.

As in the past, a copy of the calendar isbeing mailed to each member of the classeswhich will hold reunions next June.Others may receive copies by sendingfifteen cents to Foster M. Coffin '12, 31Morrill Hall, Ithaca.

"THE HILL" SET TO MUSIC

A new alumni song, new music to oldand familiar words, has just been pub-lished by H. T. Fitzsimons of Chicago.George F. Pond Ίo has set to music thepoem "The Hill" by Dean Albert W.Smith '78. The song is dedicated toPresident Farrand, and is designed for amale chorus.

PHILIP J. STONE '29 of Washington,D. C., has been elected editor of theFreshman Handbook for 1928. HaroldW. Halverson '29 of Rochester was chosenbusiness manager.

Page 8: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

202 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

Published for the Alumni Corporationof Cornell University by the CornellAlumni News Publishing Corporation.

Published weekly during the college year andmonthly in July and August; forty issues annually.Issue No. 1 is published the last Thursday ofSeptember. Weekly publication, numbered con-secutively, ends the last week in June. Issue No.40 is published in August and is followed by anindex of the entire volume, which will be mailedon request.

Subscription price $4.00 a year, payable in ad-vance. Foreign postage 40 cents a year extra. Singlecopies twelve cents each.

Should a subscriber desire to discontinue hissubscription a notice to that effect should be sent inbefore its expiration. Otherwise it is assumed thata continuance of the subscription is desired.

Checks, drafts and orders should be made payableto Cornell Alumni News.

Correspondence should be addressed—Cornell Alumni News, Ithaca, N. Y.

Editor-in-Chief andBusiness ManagerCirculation Manager

R. W. SAILOR '07GEO. WM. HORTON

Associate EditorsCLARK S. NORTHUP '93 FOSTER M. COFFIN '12ROMEYN BERRY '04 MORRIS G. BISHOP '13H. G. STUTZ '07 M. L. COFFIN

WILLIAM J. WATERS '27

Officers of the Cornell Alumni News PublishingCorporation; R. W. Sailor, President; W. J. Nor-ton, Vice-President; R. W. Sailor, Treasurer; H. G.Stutz, Secretary; Romeyn Berry and W. L. Todd,Directors. Office: 113 East Green Street, Ithaca,N.Y.

Member ofIntercollegiate Alumni Extension Service, Inc.

Printed by The Cayuga Press

Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y.

ITHACA, N. Y., JANUARY 19, 1928

FOUNDER'S DAY AN INSTITUTION

FOUNDER'S Day has undoubtedlybecome an annual affair. It is fitting

that the birthday of Ezra Cornell shouldbe observed. His sturdy characteristicsand his magnificent generosity, with littleregard for the sacrifice he made on hisown part and for his descendants, mightwell be kept in the minds of Cornelliansas an inspiration.

There is grave danger, of course, thatsuch a celebration, annually, might be-come trite, then a duty, then a bore, andat this point the event would automaticallydiscontinue itself for lack of an audience.An unending series of anecdotes from theFounder's private and public life, andannual attempts to reinterpret his allegedmotto-like words about the sort of insti-tution he would found will eventuallyproduce just this result.

Such a sound idea for an All-CornellDay should not be allowed to pass throughthese stages without a struggle. The dayis an opportunity, not a chore, and theopportunity is one for nation-wide dis-cussion of the aims of the Founder and hisassociates; a comparison of the Cornell ofthe early days and its unique aspirationsand opportunities with the Cornell of to-day and of each succeeding year. Chang-ing conditions make the comparison evernew.

A day of this sort might well be devotedto studying Cornell as it is now. Let the

comparisons with sixty years ago becomemere routine, perhaps, but the re-dis-covery, annually, of the meaning of Cor-nell by her alumni will be an interestingand profitable experience to each one ofus, and worth at least the annual effort.

Walter P. Cooke '91 Returns

COMING EVENTS

Saturday, January 21Lecture, Count Felix von Luckner. Baker

Laboratory, 8:15 p. m.Basketball, Columbia at Ithaca.Wrestling, Columbia at Ithaca.Hockey, Princeton at Princeton.

Tuesday, January 24University concert, Sophie Braslau,

contralto. Bailey Hall, 8.15 p. m.Wednesday, January 25

Basketball, Princeton at Princeton.Saturday, January 28

Hockey, Clarkson Tech at Ithaca.Monday, January 30

Term examinations begin.

SPORT STUFF

January, rain, smallpox, no skating,mud, the basketball team defeated by St.Bonaventure, Buffalo, Rochester, et al.,and examinations approaching! Whatprice undergraduate morale? No wonderprofessors are snarky and little, golden-haired tots snap at their mothers and bitebloody gobbets of flesh out of the handthat feeds them.

And then the sun comes out. Thecrews row smoothly on the Inlet. A coldwave from Manitoba is announced. Thepox looks less small and more chicken andit's mostly in Caroline and the hill countryany way. The basketball team stops thisdevastating Yale crowd and temporarilyleads the league.

Once again the Campus smiles and it'ssafe to pat little, four-year old Winifredwithout first stuffing a clothes pin be-tween her jaws.

The importance which a universitycommunity ascribes to such questions asevolution, prohibition, the League of Na-tions, pacificism, Al Smith, and the revoltof youth is governed largely by theweather, the intestines, and how AlmaMater's teams are faring on the field ofso-called sport.

R. B.

HENRY GRATTAN DOYLE, dean of menat George Washington University andhead of the Spanish Department at Cor-nell during the summer sessions in 1920and 1923, has announced a competitionin which prizes will be awarded for thebest editorials published in college journalsduring the academic year 1927-28. Theawards will be made by Pi Delta Epsilon,honorary journalism fraternity, of whichDean Doyle is grand vice-president.

Served For Two Years In ImportantPositions in Connection with

Operation of Dawes Plan

Walter P. Cooke '91 has returned to hishome in Buffalo after two years of servicein Europe in connection with the operationof the Dawes plan. Mr. Cooke wentabroad in the fall of 1925, as president ofthe Arbitral Tribunal of Interpretation,serving until April, 1926. He then re-signed to accept the position of UnitedStates Citizen Member of the ReparationCommission, and until his resignation onDecember 3, 1927, held that position andresided in Paris. The Arbitral Tribunalhad its sittings in the Peace Palace at theHague.

When the Dawes Plan was adopted in1924 these two positions of particular in-terest to Americans were created. TheArbitral Tribunal of Interpretation wasset up as a court of arbitration to decidedisputes between Germany on the onehand and the allied nations on the otherhand, growing out of the execution of theplan. That Court had five members, oneappointed by Germany, one by the Re-paration Commission, and three appointedby Germany and the Reparation Com-mission. It was agreed that one of thesethree should be an American citizen andact as president of the court. It was aspresident that Cooke was appointed.

The Reparation Commission was de-signed originally to have five members, aBritish delegate, a French delegate, anItalian delegate, a Belgian delegate, anda delegate from the United States whowould, it was generally conceded, act aschairman. When the United Statesfailed to ratify the treaty it left the Com-mission with only four members, whichgave rise to considerable difficulty, andwhen the Dawes Plan was adopted at theconference in London in 1924 that situa-tion was corrected by providing that untilthe United States should ratify the treaty,the Reparation Commission should fromtime to time elect a fifth member whoshould sit with them whenever discussingmatters affecting reparations and theDawes Plan, and have a vote with theother members. Mr. Cooke served asUnited Sίates Citizen Member under thisarrangement.

Before Cooke left France, the FrenchGovernment elected him a Grand Officerof the Legion of Honor, and the BelgianGovernment made him a Grand Officerof the Order of Leopold.

PENTHAMA, women's honorary athleticsociety, has elected lone P. Barrett '28 ofWhite Plains to membership. Miss Bar-rett has been on the women's hockey andbasketball teams for two years. She willbe awarded the women's varsity C, thehighest athletic honor, at the next meetingof the Women's Athletic Association.

Page 9: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 203

The Week on the Campus

THE one hundred and twenty-first birthday of Ezra Cornell wasfittingly celebrated on January

11, both at his University and through-out the country. At the Founder's Daybanquet of the Cornell Clubs of Ithacathe speakers were John A. Blair '28, agreat-grandson of Ezra Cornell, Mrs.Elsie Singmaster Lewars '02, and thePresident, who was mysteriously andfelicitously introduced by the toastmaster,Robert E. Treman '09, as the editor ofThe Daily Princetonίan.

THE PRESIDENT spoke of the jfart thatcertain dynamic characters had had inshaping the present character of the Uni-versity. He mentioned especially DeanVeranus A. Moore '87, Prof. Isaac P.Roberts, former dean of the College ofAgriculture, and now in his ninety-fifthyear, the late Dean Thomas FrederickCrane, and Professor John H. Comstock'74. "Have the ideals of the founderbeen achieved with reasonable success?"he questioned, and concluded optimisti-cally that the vigor and distinction of theUniversity have never been higher thanthey are today.

MEANWHILE the Cornell Clubs through-out the land gathered on Founder's Dayto celebrate their common memories withfestival and song. The program of theSchenectady Club, including a speech byEdwin Place '83 on " Sixty Years of Cor-nell/' was broadcast over a chain of sta-tions. The energetic young walkingdelegate of the Alumni Office, Thomas J.McFadden '22, contrived to address awhole series of such meetings.

THE COMMITTEE on General Adminis-tration announces the appointment ofProfessor D. L. Finlayson of Wells Collegeas lecturer in fine arts for the second term,and also the appointments of J. Maurer,instructor in surgery in the VeterinaryCollege, of Miss N. F. Rose, technician,and of W. F. McDonald, instructor inclassics. The last-named will replaceProfessor James F. Mountford, traded tothe Aberystwith Club (if we may adoptthe language of the Sports page for achange.)

THE SAME COMMITTEE announces thegift to the University by an anonymousdonor of five hundred acres of abandonedfarm land in Newfield, which will be usedfor experiments and instruction in forestryand as an observation ground for botanists.This land is technically known as "sub-marginal," which means in the languageof the scientists that it ain't worth a cussfor farming. Ruined farm buildings standon it as a tragic testimonial to man's de-feat in this skirmish in the world-widebattle with Nature. Too unfruitful tosupport a farmer's family, this land is yetof great value to our experimentalists.Especially it will serve as an example ofthe methods to be employed in reclaiming

abandoned farm-land by productive re-forestation.

HERE is AN IDEA for the CornellianCouncil: Don't Throw Away Your Cast-off Farms—Give Them to the University.

THE C. U. C. A. is conducting a rousingcampaign for contributions for its work.It asks $2,000 from the students and$1,800 from the Faculty and friends of theAssociation. This seems a reasonableenough endowment for current expensesin a student body of five thousand.Coincidentally with the announcement ofthe drive appear notices of special activi-ties of the Association. These are, inaddition to the routine work with indi-viduals who seek its aid, the hut forcountry outings, the loan fund, and theSaturday Lunch Club.

THE C. U. C. A. CABIN will be built onthe Morse Stephens Memorial property,on the east shore of the Lake, about threemiles from town. William J. Norton '02,owner of the land, has made the siteavailable. It is intended principally as acenter for country walks, skiing, and otheroutdoor occupations. A field near bywill be used for games and athletics. Onecan swim in the brook or in the lake. Itwill contain one large room, a kitchen,and two large fire-places, and will be opento any group of Cornell men that makeapplication and undertake to care properlyfor the equipment. One thousand dollarshas been underwritten by members of theC. U. C. A. staff and board of directors.Five hundred dollars for furnishing andequipment is asked of the students, aspart of the budget of $3,800. It looks asif the students would get rather more thanthey give.

THE LOAN FUND of the Association is tobe administered by the EmploymentBureau. It is fixed at $500, and is de-signed to help those students who have tohave a small loan quickly. The Univer-sity Loan Fund is a long-term-proposi-tion, which makes its grants after dueinvestigation. The C. U. C. A., with itsshort-term call-money plan, proposes tokeep its clients out of bankruptcy duringsudden periods of stringency, tight money,and panic.

IRVING LEVY '28 won the annual '94Debate and $94 last Tuesday, upholdingthe negative of the resolution that theconduct of affairs with Nicaragua by theCoolidge administration is to be con-demned. The attendance was small, andthe interest divided between the $94 andthe conduct of affairs in Nicaragua. Onereflects once more on the decline of de-bating in the last thirty-four years. Wenotice that the Columbia and Harvardteams, discussing the resolution thatAlfred E. Smith is Eminently Qualifiedfor the Presidency, broadcast their argu-ments over WRNY last Saturday. Per-haps the only recourse for the debaters is

to seize on some palpitating subject ofactuality and seek their audience throughthe microphone.

A FEW MILD cases of smallpox have beendiscovered in Ithaca and its vicinity.The school-children have all been vac-cinated, and a good many others havecome for the serum voluntarily. No oneseems to be alarmed: the Health Officer,Dr. L. T. Genung, says that the littleepidemic is a good thing, as it has madethe immunization of the communityalmost complete.

DON SALVADOR DE MADARIAGA, formerchief of the disarmament section of theLeague of Nations Secretariat, gavethree lectures last week on "The Progressof Disarmament." The crowds thatflocked to his lectures made evident thatdisarmament and the League of Nationsare subjects of no mere academic interest.It should, however, be added that Senorde Madariaga's charm of personality andbrilliancy of manner had something to dowith the general appeal of his subject.

THE LOCAL Volunteer Firemen's or-ganization is planning to bring to Ithacathe 56th annual convention of the StateFiremen's Association. The Boy Scoutleaders of the country will assemble herenext September. The State Teachers'Association is also due in November.Who is doing all this, anyway?

THE NEW YORK STATE VeterinarySociety gathered for its annual conventionlast week. Over two hundred memberswere present. They were welcomed byDean Veranus A. Moore '87, and listenedto speeches by the President and by vari-ous eminent members of their profession.As most of the delegates are Cornellgraduates, the convention took on some-thing of the air of an alumni reunion.

ONE OF THE VETERINARY delegateslingered long before the painting of theunicorn in Willard Straight lobby. Hestarted away several times, and returnedto it as if fascinated. Finally he turned toone of the artists working on the murals."A horse with a horn and a beard!" heexclaimed. For a time the air of WillardStraight ached with mutual scorn.

M. G. B.

INFORMAL PIANO RECITALS will be givenin the Memorial Hall of Willard StraightMonday, Tuesday, Wednesday, andThursday afternoons of each week, begin-ning January 2, by undergraduates.Among the students who will participatein the program are Philip R. Distillator '29of New York, Edwin T. Hebert '29 ofPittsfield, Mass., Leonard A. Spolansky'29 of Ithaca, John M. Billings '30 ofManchester, Ind., Frank Bloom '30 ofNew York, Thomas L. Frankenberg '30 ofBrookline, Mass., Ermanno F. Gizzarelli'30 of Port Henry, Joseph K. Pay ton '30of Cleveland, Ohio, J. Smith, Jr., '30 ofIndianapolis, Ind., and N. M. Barnhart'31 of Mahanoy City, Pa.

Page 10: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

204 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

THE ALUMNI

'90 MME—Arthur B. Levy has changedhis name to Arthur B. Leith. He lives atthe Hotel Berkley, 170 West Seventy-fourth Street, New York.

'94 ME—Augusta W. W. F. Andrews,daughter of William J. Andrews '94, wasmarried on September 10 to J. S, E.Young, a second lieutenant in the UnitedStates Marine Corps, and a graduate ofthe United States Naval Academy in1926. "Buck" Andrews lives at 105 EastNorth Street, Raleigh, N. C.

'05 AB—Arthur D. Camp is in the re-search department in the Buffalo fabricat-ing Division of the United States Alum-inum Company. He lives in Buffalo at194 Voorhees Avenue.

'07 ME—Isaac J. Koy is president ofthe Texarkana Casket Company, inTexarkana, Texas.

'07 AB '05 AB—Mr. and Mrs. OswaldD. Ingall (Elizabeth Church '05) havereturned to their home on NantucketIsland after an extended trip across thecontinent during which they visited citieson the West Coabt from Vancouver toSan Diego. On the campus at Berkeleythey write that they got the illusion ofbeing on the Cornell campus by meetingWalton Van Winkle Ό6 and Walter Mul-ford '99. Their island home they de-scribe as a place "where the latch-stringis ever out, with a bite to eat, a bed ortwo, and some logs for a friendly fire."

Ό8 ME—Clarence W. Ham is professorof machine design at the University ofIllinois. During the summer months heengages in engineering practice with theGleason Works in Rochester, N. Y.,where he was employed for four years be-fore going to Illinois in 1921.

Ίo ME—Edwin S. Crosby is generalsales manager of the Celeto ProductsCompany at n Broadway, New York.He lives at 7 Washington Road, Maple-wood, N. J. He is now on a two months'trip during which he will visit all theoffices of the company on the Pacific Coast.

' 12 BArch—Ralph Fanning is professorof the history of fine arts at Ohio StateUniversity.

7i2 ME; '26 AB; '26 AB—As a rewardfor high scholastic attainments, WilliamA. Borden '12, Robert V. Horton '26, andFrederick H. Schroeder '26 have beenelected to the student editorial board ofThe Harvard Business Review. They areall in the last year of the Harvard businesscourse. Twenty men are elected to theReview board each year.^ This yearStanford took first place with Cornell byplacing three, Harvard placed two, andthe other colleges were represented by oneeach.

'13 ME—Stanley J. Chute left theGriscom Russell Company in New Yorkin December to become an industrial

engineer with the C. H. Wheeler Manu-facturing Company of Philadelphia, Pa.He lives at 84 Linwood Avenue, Ridge-wood, N. J.

Ί6 ME—Neil A. Gorman is with Mc-Donnell and Gorman, engineering andgeneral contractors in China. His ad-dress is 29 Consular Road, Tientsin. Ason, Dennis Stevens, was born on October

I7Ί7BS—Ralph C. Parker is assistant

manager in the agricultural departmentof the Barrett Company, 40 RectorStreet, New York. He lives at 333Morriss Avenue, Rockville Centre, LongIsland, N, Y.

Ί7BS—Henry E. Allison on July iwas appointed assistant chief of theBureau of Plant Industry of the UnitedStates Department of Agriculture. Hehad been assistant to the chief of thebureau since 1921. During his under-graduate days he was for two years sec-retary to the Dean of the College ofAgriculture.

'17 BChem, '13 BChem; '21; ;22, '24BChem—Herbert R. Johnston is on thetechnical staff of Pratt and Lambert, Inc.,in their Buffalo office. He lives at 81Tacoma Avenue. He has two sons,Richard W., aged eight, and Donald H.,who is three. He writes that Edwin L.Georger '13 is in the Chicago office ofPratt and Lambert, and that Carlton P.Cooke '21 and Harold G. Hayward '22are in the Buffalo office of the company.

'17 AB—Joseph A. Heller is with P. J.Tierney Sons, at 188 Main Street, NewRochelle, N. Y.

'17 ME—Rudolf E. Greuter is vice-president of Webster Tallmadge and Com-pany, Inc., specialists in steam engineer-ing, with offices at 50 Church Street, N. Y.

Ί8, '21 BS—Clarence P. Hotson isworking on his doctorial dissertation atHarvard. His subject is "Emerson andSwedenborg." His address is 23-6 ShalerLane, Cambridge. He has two daughters,Eleanor, aged four, and Grace Augusta,who is one.

Ί8—Wesley M. Dixon is president of anew company formed by the merger ofthe Dixon Board Mills with the SeftonManufacturing Corporation. The newcompany is capitalized at six million dol-lars, and manufactures paper cartons andcorrugated shipping cases, with mainoffices at 5 South Wabash Avenue, Chi-cago. Dixon was president of the DixonBoard Mills before the merger. Hisaddress is 1510 North Dearborn Street,Chicago. A son, Wesley M. Jr., was bornon October 18.

Ί8, '20 AB; '25 BS—Mr. and Mrs. JohnA. Rodger (Dorothy I. Fessenden '25)live at 8655 io2d Street, Richmond Hill,N. Y. A son, Robert Rutherford, wasborn to them on October 29.

Ί8 AB, '21 MD—Lemuel Caro has re-turned from a trip abroad, during which

he visited by airplane Paris, Berlin,Vienna, Budapest, Munich, and Brussels.He is a physician in New Rochelle, N. Y.,in the Pintard Apartments.

Ί8—Wade L. Bascom is manager of theBascom Company, dealers in dairy prod-ucts in Youngstown, Ohio. His addressis 35 New. York Avenue. A daughter,Barbara Janet, was born on September 23.

Ί8BS—Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Ross(Dorothy Ashley Ί8) live at 743 ClarkPlace, Orange, N. J. A son, John Ashley,was born on December 14.

Ί8CE—George P. Bullard is a man-ager of erection with the McClintic-Marshall Company. His address is 74North Franklin Street, Pottstown, Pa.

Ί8 LLB—Charles H. Bose is associatedwith John C. MacCarthy in the generalpractice of law under the firm name ofBose and MacCarthy, at 225 Broadway,New York. Bose lives at 70 Thirty-thirdStreet, Woodcliff, N. J.

'19 CE—Samuel Kaufman is a con-tractor in New York. His address is 803West iδoth Street.

'19 ME, '22—Mr. and Mrs. HaroldRaynolds have two sons. Their secondwas born on October 29. Mrs. Raynolds(Dorothy M. Smith '22) is the daughter ofProfessor Albert W. Smith '78 and Mrs.Ruby Green Smith, Ph.D. '14. Mr. andMrs. Raynolds live at 190 East ChestnutStreet, Chicago.

'19 AB—Alpheus W. Smith is assistantprofessor of English at NorthwesternUniversity. Since leaving Cornell he hasspent a year in the Near East on business,has taught English at the University ofMinnesota, and has studied for his doc-torate at Harvard.

'19, '23 CE—C. Malcolm Mitchell isin the oil business with the Creole Syndi-cate in Maracaibo, Venezuela, and ex-pects to be there until next April. Hispermanent address is Rushmore Avenue,Mamaroneck, N. Y.

'19 ME;'20 BS—Mr. and Mrs. RalphF. Jones (Louise M. Roux '20) havemoved to Middletown, Conn., whereJones is associated with the Russell Manu-facturing Company. They are living onGordon Place.

'20 BiS—Katherine Crowly is teachinghome economics in Rochester, N. Y. Shelives at 56 Rowley Street.

'20 ME—Walter A. Baer is a plantengineer in the Weidmann division of theUnited Piece Dye Works. His address is400 East Thirtieth Street, Pater son, N. J.

'20 AB—H. Cushman Ballou is anassociate manager of the National CityCompany, at Canal Street and Broad-way, New York.

'21 AB—Mr. and Mrs. Francis J.Hallihan (Agnes M. Meehan '21) havemoved to West Stephentown, N. Y.They have a daughter, Mary, aged oneand a half.

Page 11: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 205

It

ΠΠ- TΓ1

telephones and ίroopsboth need behind-die-line support

Backing up the telephone ^witha reliable service of supply.

1 Backof your 4

.telephone

BACK of the front line soldier there must be avast machinery of supply. And back of the

telephone there is a vast machinery of supply — buy-ing, making, distributing the materials and equip-ment essential to Bell Telephone service.

To carry out this responsibility Western Electriccovers the globe with its purchasing activities, oper-ates the world's largest telephone factory and main-tains a nationwide service of distribution from thirty-four telephone supply warehouses.

This work involves buying some 8,000 materialsfrom Asphalt to Zinc, and making some 110,000separate piece parts for telephones and for all thatbehind -the-telephone apparatus which constitutesninety-eight percent of the total equipment,

Behind the lines at the greatWestern Electric cable shop*

Some idea of the men behindthe machines behind the lines.

'Way behind the lines—selecting materials from farcorners of the earth.

S I N C E 1 8 8 2 M A N U F A C T U R E R S F O R T H E B E L L S Y S T E M

Page 12: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

206 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

Does Your

Collar Fitover the High Spots

into the Hollows?

The Concave Collar Fits

This Kind Doesn't

My Shirts Have

Concave Collars!

Four ShirtsWhite Oxford

Button Cuff

Ten Dollars

Ready for Immediate

Delivery to You

Parcel Post Prepaid

On Receipt of Your

Check or Money Order

P.S. All sizes.

MAKER OFJSHIRTS(THATFIT

106 N. TIOGA ST.ITHACA NEW YORK

Dear Hibby:Enclosed find ten dollars. Please

send me jour of those white oxfordshirts with concave collars—

Si%e Sleeve length

As soon as -possible!

Name

Address-

City _ State-

'22 BS—Ellery R. Barney is teachinganimal husbandry at the State School ofAgriculture in Delhi, N. Y. He has a son,Kent Dean, who is almost a year old.

'22 AB—Mr. and Mrs. Richard W.Dingle have announced the marriage oftheir daughter, Delia S. Dingle '22, toFrederick W. Kemp, on August 6. Kempis a graduate of the Osgoode Hall LawSchool and received his M.A. from TorontoUniversity. He is practicing law inToronto. They live at 5 Elmhurst Ave-nue, Lansing, Ontario.

'22 ME—Mr. and Mrs. Leonard B.Colt live at 129 Williams Street, Provi-dence, R. I. A daughter, Sarah Ames,was born on November 19.

'2368;'21 BS—Mr. and Mrs. VernonG. Caldwell (Dorothy F. Sullivan '23)live at 144 Commonwealth Avenue,Buffalo. They have two children, Wil-liam Frederick, who is three, and MarieJean, who was born last June. Mrs.Caldwell writes that Mr. and Mrs. Cole-man Hamblen (Mildred L. Aldrich '21)live at 449 Colvin Parkway, Buffalo.

'23 ME—Robert E. Bruckner is withthe Ingersoll-Rand Company, at Phillips-burg, N. J. He lives at 231 BushkillStreet, Easton, Pa.

'23 ME—Mrs. Katherine Griffiths ofIngram, Pa., has announced the engage-ment of her daughter, Eleanore Winifred,to Stephen M. Jenks '23, son of SidneyG. Jenks '97. Miss Griffiths is a graduateof the College of Fine Arts of the CarnegieInstitute of Technology.

'23 AB—Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin M.Bailey of Jamestown, N. Y., have an-nounced the marriage of their daughter,Mary, to Ernest D. Leet '23 on October 18.Mr. and Mrs. Leet are living in Jamestownat 153 Maple Street. Mrs. Leet is asister of Milton Bailey Ί8 and RogerBailey '19.

'23 BS—Oliver L. Clarkson was mar-ried on September 10 to Miss EthelFuller of Bessemer, Ala. They are livingin Beverly, N. J. Clarkson is connectedwith the Beverly Nurseries.

'23 AB, '27 AM—Barbara C. Fretz isteaching education at the Cortland, N. Y.,Normal School. She lives at 45 ChurchStreet.

'24 AB, '26 CE; '25 EE—Charles N.Strong is with the Anglo-Chilean Con-solidated Nitrate Corporation. His ad-dress is Casilla 17, Tocopilla, Chile, S. A.He writes that Robert H. Mott-Smith '25recently arrived in his town.

'24 ME—Letcher W. Bennett is withthe Bennett Machinery Company, at 30Church Street, New York. They sellmachine tools.

'24 AB; '24, '25 BS—Dr. and Mrs. Wil-laim L. Hunton have announced themarriage of their daughter, Marion HoppeHunton '24, to Francis M. Porch on Sep-tember 24, at Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs.Porch are living at 175 Claremont Avenue,

New York. Porch is sales representativeof the American Creosoting Company ofLouisville, Ky.

'24 AB—Oliver D. Comstock is train-ing reporters in the New York district forthe F. W. Dodge Corporation, publishersof construction news and magazines deal-ing with construction and architecture.He is living at the Cornell Club in NewYork.

'24 AB—Wilton Jaffee is in the manu-facturing business. He lives at 87 Ar-leigh Road, Great Neck, N. Y.

'25 BS—Lucille Howe is teaching house-hold economics and clothing in theBethlehem, Pa., Junior High School.She lives at 41 West Church Street.

'25 EE—Alva V. Courtright is assistantengineer with the Columbia Engineeringand Management Corporation. He livesat 314 West Fourth Street, Cincinnati,Ohio.

'25 BS—John E. Coykendall is aflorist in Rome, N. Y. He has recentlybought a house at 1018 Schuyler Street.

'25 AB; '26 AB—Charles F. Newtonand Violetta E. Gordon were married onJune 30. They live in Aurora-on-Cayuga,N. Y. Mrs. Newton is teaching Englishand French and Newton is principal atthe Emily Rowland High School.

'25 BS; '27—Mr. and Mrs. George C.Strong (Alice V. Kangas '27) live in WaterMill, Long Island, N. Y., where Strongis a potato farmer. A son, George Andrew,was born on August 31.

'25 AB—Francis M. Sweet is spendingher third year as a teacher of French atthe South Park High School in Buffalo.She lives at 22 Roanoke Parkway. Shespent last summer in Europe.

'25 AB—Marjorie B. Swarthout isteaching mathematics in Penn YanAcademy. She lives in Hall, N. Y.

'25—Robert C. Ludlum is with theStandard Oil Company of New York inTokyo, Japan. He expects to be back inthis country in 1929.

'26 BS; '26 AB—Mr. and Mrs. LeonardBenedicks have announced the engage-ment of their daughter, Beatrice Bene-dicks '26, to John J. Wille. Miss Bene-dicks is teaching Latin and history inNew York.' She lives at 835 RiversideDrive. Wille is a municipal engineer, andexpects to get his master's degree thisJune from New York University.

'26 BS—Wellington R. Burt is generalmanager of the Alsteel ManufacturingCompany, and secretary and a director ofthe Michigan Metal Products Company.He lives at 57 Guest Street, Battle Creek,Mich. A daughter, Jane Loomis, wasborn on September 4.

'26 AB—Richard (Shorty) Aronson hasgiven up the brokerage business and isnow attending the Law School at SyracuseUniversity and is working in a law office.His address is 423 Allen Street, Syracuse.

Page 13: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 207

IT HAS BEEN THE PURPOSE OF

FINCH LEY TO DEVELOP ONLY THE

MOST INTERESTING AND CORRECT

TYPE OF WEARABLES—AND IT IS

COMMONLY ACKNOWLEDGED THAT

THE CLOTHES, HATS, SHOES AND

HABERDASHERY FOR LOUNGE, BUSI-

NESS, SPORTS AND FORMAL USAGE

ARE QUITE INCOMPARABLE IN

E VERY DEGREE. EXHIBITIONS ARE

HELD AT FREQUENT INTERVALS

IN VARIOUS CITIES OF IMPOR-

TANCE. IT WILL RESULT TO YOUR

ADVANTAGE TO ATTEND THESE

EXHIBITIONS WHEN NEAR YOU.

WRITE DEPARTMENT C FOR

ILLUSTRA TED CA TALOG; ALSOINFORMATION AS TO DATES

AND PLACES OF EXHIBITIONS.

THE

FIFTH AVENUE AT FORTY-SIXTH STREETNEW Y O F K

Do You Recallthe time when—

the bridge by Teefee's waswrecked 1

the Cider Mill changedhands ?

Freshmen Banquets wereon Cayuga Street ?

the Frosh horned into theDutch?

Then You Will ChuckleWhen You Read

Romeyn Berry watches the foibles ofyouth with the lifted eyebrow of theforties* He brings back the high spotsof your own early days as he picturesthe rising generation. Yet by somesecret art he leaves you satisfied andpleased with yourself and the rest ofthe world. His comparisons have thetolerance that comes only with theperspective of maturity.

Sport Stuffin book form, thirty-seven essays withtwenty illustrations made for the text

by Andre Smith

Cloth $1.50 eachPaper $1.00 each

Postpaid

The Cayuga PressBox 103 Ithaca, N.Y.

Page 14: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

208 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

IACKAWANNAShortest Route between NEW YORK and ITHACA

LackawannaRailroad

Daily Service—Eastern Standard Time.

WHITELIGHT LIMITEDLv. New York (33d St.) 11.41 P.M.

LACKAWANNA LIMITEDLv. New York—- - 10.00 A.M.Newark 10.33 A.M.Brick Church 10.41 A.M.Ar.Ithaca - 5.20 P. M.

Newark 11.58 P.M.Brick Church-- 12.06 A.M.Ar.Ithaca- 7.10A.M.

For tickets and reservations apply to ]. L. Homer, Qen'l. East. Pass. Agent, 112 W.42nd St., New Ύork or J. Q. Bray, Div. Pass. Agent. 32 Clinton St., Newark, N.J.

H. B. Cook, City Ticket Agent, 200 East State Street,Ithaca, N. Y.

1O14 C H A P E L ST.

Rep. Mr. J

Pittsburgh

7 TAILORS

Rep. Mr. Jerry Coan exhibiting our Spring importations at:

° I ε s TN E W Y O R K

tions at:

William Penn

IthacaTrust Company

Resources OverFive Million Dollars

President Charles E. TremanVice-Pres Franklin C. CornellTreasurer Sherman PeerCashier A. B. Wellar

R. A. Heggie & Bro. Co.

FraternityJewelers

Ithaca New York

For Your Boy—A Worthwhile Summer Vacation

CAMP OTTERIn the Highlands of Ontario

for Boys Ten to Sixteen—iδth Year

Write for the Catalog

R. C. Hubbard205 Ithaca Rd. Ithaca, New York

Quality Service

E. H. WANZERIncorporated

Grocers

Aurora and State Streets

KOHM & BRUNNETailors for Cornellians

Everywhere

222 E. State St., Ithaca

"ITHACA"ENGRAVING G*r3fn~Exce//en£ Engraving-Serviced

Library Building, 123 N.Tio£a Street

'27 BS—Charles I. Bowman has re-signed his position with Barber and Ben-nett, Inc., in Albany, and is now workingon the farm at his home in Constableville,N. Y.

'27 BS—Marion N. Bronson is teachingscience in the Deposit, N. Y., High School.She lives at 114 Second Street.

'27 ME; '25 ME—Homer T. Hirst, sd,is a service engineer with the Federal Pipeand Supply Company. His address is900 South Campbell Avenue, Chicago.He is engaged to Miss Louise Garver ofLorain, Ohio. He writes that Vincent L.Kohl '25 is with the CommonwealthEdison Company in Chicago.

'27jBS; '20 BArch; '26 BS—Sarah L.Holcomb is selling for R. H. Stearns Com-pany in Boston and is taking an extensioncourse in advanced commercial art atHarvard. She lives at 229 NewburyStreet. She writes that Charles A. Hol-comb '20 is a partner in the advertisingagency of Wolcott and Holcomb, Inc., inBoston^ and that Florence M. Burtis '26is a girls' club leader in charge of musicalprograms in the Boston Y. W. C. A.

'27 BS—F. Helen Huston is assistantmanager of the Y. W. C. A. cafeteria inScranton, Pa.

'27 BS—Evelyn Greene is teachinghomemaking in the Junior High Schoolin East Otto, N. Y.

'27 AB—Albert J. Evans, Jr., is inbusiness with his father in Fort Valley,Ga. They have a marketing agency forGeorgia peaches, pecans, and asparagus.

'27 ME—Norman L. Davidson is anengineer with the Ingersoll-Rand Com-pany in Phillipsburg, N. J.

'27 AB—Alvin R. Cowan is teachingEnglish in the Brooklyn Technical HighSchool and is studying at the FordhamUniversity Law School. He lives at 625East Fifteenth Street, Brooklyn.

'27 ME—Daniel M. Rollins is an assist-ant engineer with the Ward-LeonardElectric Company in Mount Vernon, N.Y. He lives in Bronxville.

'27 BS—Herman R. Schenkel is a floristwith the W. H. Stone Company, in BluePoint, Long Island, N. Y.

'27 ME—Edwin B. McCrohan, Jr., isan assistant naval architect and marineengineer with the New York Yacht,Launch, and Engine Company. His ad-dress is 168 Waverly Place, New York.

'27 BS—Charles M. Werly is taking hisfirst year at the Harvard Graduate Schoolof Business Administration. His addressis D-23 McCulloch, Soldiers Field Sta-tion, Boston.

'28; '27 AB—Sydney Hamburger isstudying in the School of Architecture atNew York University. He lives at 371Fort Washington Avenue, New York.He writes that Lester J. Rosenberg '27 isnow living at 960 Greenfield Avenue,Woodmere, Longjsland, N. Y.

Page 15: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

J. Dall, Jr., Inc.Building Construction

Ithaca

N.Y.

J. Dall, Jr., '16President

Phone2369

PROVIDENCE HARTFORD

ESTABROOK&Co.

Sound InvestmentsNew York

24 BroadBoston15 State

ROGER H. WILLIAMS '95New York Resident Partner

SPRINGFIELD NEW BEDFORD

Hemphill, Noyes Cδ, Co.37 Wall Street, New York

Investment Securities

Philadelphia Albany Boston BaltimorePittsburgh Rochester Buffalo Syracuse

Jansen Noyes ΊO Clifford HemphillStanton Griffis ΊO Harold StrongWalter S. Marvin Kenneth K. WardJ. Stanley Davis L. M. Blancke Ί5

Members of the New York Stock Exchange

SHELDON COURTA fireproof, modern, private dor-mitory for men students at Cornell.

Catalogue sent on requestA. R. Congdon, Mgr., Ithaca, N. Y.

MERCERSBURG ACADEMYOffers a thorough physical, mental and moral train-ing for college or business. Under Christian mastersfrom the great universities. Located in the Cum-berland Valley. New gymnasium. Equipmentmodern. Write for catalogue.

WILLIAM MANN IRVINE, LL.D., Head-masterMercersburg, Pennsylvania

THE CORNELL ALUMNIPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

DETROIT, MICH.

EDWIN ACKERLYA. B. '20, LL. B., Detroit '22

Real Estate Investment Specialist701 Penobscot Bldg.

FORT WORTH, TEXAS

LEE, LOMAX & WRENLawyers General Practice

506-9 Wheat BulidingAttorneys for Santa Fe Lines

C. K. Lee, Cornell '89-90 P. T. Lomax, Texas '98F. J. Wren, Texas 1913-14

TULSA, OKLAHOMA

HERBERT D. MASON, LL. B. ΌoAttorney and Counselor at Law

1000-1008 Atlas Life Bldg,MASON, HONNOLD, CARTER & HARPER

WASHINGTON, D. C.

THEODORE K. BRYANT '97, '98Master Patent Law, G. W. U. Ό8

Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively309-314 Victor Building

KENOSHA, WIS.

MACWHYTE COMPANYManufacturers of Wire and Wire Rope

Streamline and Round Tie Rodsfor Airplanes.

Jessel S. Whyte, M.E. '13, Vice PresidentR. B. Whyte, M.E. '13, Gen. Supt.

BALTIMORE, MD.

WHITMAN, REQUARDT & SMITHWater Supply, Sewerage, Structural and

Valuations of Public Utilities. Reports,Plans and General Consulting Practice.

Ezra B. Whitman, C.E. '01G. J. Requardt, C.E. '09 B. L. Smith, C.E. '15

18 E. Lexington St.

ITHACA, N. Y.

GEORGE S. TARBELLPh.B. '91—LL.B. '94Ithaca Trust Building

Attorney and Counselor at LawIthaca Real Estate

Rented, Sold, and Managed

P. W. WOOD & SONP. O. Wood Ό8

Insurance316-318 Savings Bank Bldg.

CLEVELAND, OHIO

THE BRITTON-QARDNER PRINTING COMPANYCaxton Building Cleveland, Ohio

Catalog, Publication & Color PrintingSpecializing in Large Edition Work

K, B. BRITTON Ό6 H. K. GARDNER ' 18

NEWARK, NEW JERSEYERNEST L. QUACKENBUSH

A. B. Όo, New York University 1909Counselor-at-Law

901-906 Security Bank Building

NEW YORK CITYMARTIN H. OFFINGER, E.E. '99

Treasurer and ManagerVan Wagoner-Linn Construction Co.

Electrical Contractors143 East 27th Street

Phone Madison Square 7320

REAL ESTATE & INSURANCELeasing, Selling, and Mortgage Loans

BAUMEISTER & BAUMEISTER11-17 East 45th Street

Phone Murray Hill 3816Charles Baumeister Ί8. '20

Philip Baumeister, Columbia '14

CHARLES A. TAUSSIGA.B. '03, LL.B., Harvard '05

220 Broadway Tel. 1906 CortlandGeneral Practice

Delaware Registration & Incorporators Co.Inquiries as to Delaware Corporation

Registrations have the personal attentionat New York office of

JOHN T. McGOVERN Όo, President31 Nassau Street Phone Rector 9867

ERNEST B. COBB, A.B. ΊoCertified Public AccountantTelephone, Cortland 5800

165 Broadway New York

E. H. FAILE & CO.

EngineersIndustrial buildings designed

Heating, Ventilating, Electrical EquipmentIndustrial power plants

Construction managementE. H. FAILE, M.E. Όό

441 Lexington Ave. Tel. Murray Hill 7736

THE BALLOU PRESSCHAS. A. BALLOU, JR. '21

Printers to Lawyers69 Beekman St. Tel. Beekman 8785

"Wilson & BristolADVERTISING

285 MADISON AVE, NEW YORKPhones: LEXINGTON 0849-0850

M A G A Z I N E S N E W S P A P E R ST R A D E PAPERS FARM P A P E R S

Arthur W. Wilson'15 Ernest M. Bristol, Yale '07

CUSTOM MADE INSURANCEIT FITS YOUR SITUATION

LEE I. TOWSLEY '22Insurance'

225 West 34th StreetRoom 1106 Lackawanna 7150

Page 16: Cornell Made Beneficiary of Adjust- ed - Cornell University

Ά 'N 'VOVH1I

AiaiαosΠVHΠ3NΉOO

001